Visuals and Logic

Read this page when the pane looks clean enough to trust, but you cannot yet say what kind of agreement you are actually looking at.

Written By AxiomCharts

Last updated About 2 hours ago

Visuals and Logic

Read this page when the pane looks clean enough to trust, but you cannot yet say what kind of agreement you are actually looking at.

The indicator is easier to use once you separate three ideas that look similar at first glance:

  • what one slot is saying
  • what the blended summary is saying
  • what full-slot alignment is saying

Those three reads can agree. They can also part ways, and that difference matters more than most first impressions suggest.

What you actually see on the chart

The indicator lives in its own lower pane. It does not draw on the price chart itself.

Visible elements can include:

  • up to ten slot lines:
    • MACD 01 Fast through MACD 10 Fast
  • the blended pair:
    • Blended Fast
    • Blended Slow
  • the Blended Histogram
  • the reference rails:
    • 100
    • 0
    • -100
    • user-defined overbought and oversold levels
  • a fill between blended Fast and blended Slow

What you do not see directly:

  • slot D lines
  • slot histograms
  • the hidden bullish and bearish slot counts that support alignment logic

That matters because the slot line you are watching is only one part of the slot state. The color and the alert logic both depend on the relationship between that visible Fast side and the hidden Slow side.

The quickest mental model

Use this simple translation:

  • slot Fast line = the slot's visible leading read
  • slot Slow line = the slot's hidden comparison line
  • slot histogram = the gap between the two inside that slot
  • blended Fast and Slow = the weighted summary pair built from participating slots
  • blended histogram = the summary of the gap inside that weighted blend

The manual sometimes uses K for the visible slot line because the script converts each slot into bounded K, D, and histogram readings. On the chart, that same visible line is labeled as the slot Fast plot. Different words, same visible curve.

You do not need the internal math to use that model well. You do need to remember that the visible slot line is not the whole slot.

What the slot colors mean

Each slot line changes color based on whether that slot's Fast side is above or below its hidden Slow side.

Practical translation:

  • up color = that slot is in a bullish regime
  • down color = that slot is in a bearish regime

That is useful because it turns a single line into a visible state read, not merely a plot. It is also limited because the line does not show the hidden Slow side directly. When you are unsure why the color changed, remember that the answer is not on the screen in full. It is in the relationship between Fast and Slow inside that slot.

What the blended pair means

The blended pair is the stack summary.

Blended Fast and Blended Slow tell you what the participating weighted slots look like after they have been compressed into one shared read. The fill between them helps you see the current summary regime more quickly.

That is the feature. It is also the risk.

The blended pair can look more settled than the stack underneath it because:

  • one slot may carry much more weight than the others
  • some active slots may be outside the blend because their weight is 0
  • active slots can use different confirmation postures
  • master smoothing can calm the summary after the blend already exists

The safer posture is to treat the blended pair as a faster review layer, not a higher authority.

What the histogram is doing

The blended histogram is the summary of separation between blended Fast and blended Slow.

Practical use:

  • rising positive bars suggest the blended spread is strengthening on the upside
  • falling negative bars suggest the blended spread is strengthening on the downside
  • movement around the zero line is useful when you care about change-of-state timing

What not to assume:

  • a positive histogram does not settle trade direction by itself
  • a zero cross is not automatically stronger than the slot design underneath it
  • hidden disagreement in the active stack can still exist while the histogram looks clean

How to read the rails

The pane uses a bounded oscillator language, so the rails matter as orientation markers.

RailWhat it helps withWhat not to assume
100 and -100Show the outer range of the bounded systemThey do not mean price itself reached a universal extreme
0Marks the middle of the bounded languageA zero cross is informative, not magical
Overbought and OversoldMark tool-defined stretch zones inside this systemTouching a rail is not automatic reversal permission

These rails are most useful when they help you ask better questions:

  • Is the current move stretched inside this workflow?
  • Is the stretch broad across the stack or mostly coming from one slot?
  • Did the stretch arrive in confirmed or live-forming conditions?

Slot state, blend state, and alignment are different reads

This is the single most useful distinction on the page.

Slot state

A slot is bullish when its Fast side is above its Slow side. A slot is bearish when its Fast side is below its Slow side.

Use slot state when you want to inspect a specific layer of context.

Blend state

The blend is bullish when blended Fast is above blended Slow. The blend is bearish when blended Fast is below blended Slow.

Use blend state when you want a weighted summary of the contributing slots.

Alignment

Alignment means every enabled slot with valid values agrees on direction.

Use alignment when you want to know whether the active stack is unanimous, not whether the weighted summary is leaning one way.

Those three questions are related, but they are not the same:

  • a slot can disagree while the blend still looks bullish
  • alignment can fail while the blend still looks orderly
  • a zero-weight slot can matter to alignment even though it does not influence the blend

The three slot states people confuse most often

Enabled

The slot calculates, can alert, can count toward alignment, and can influence the blend if its weight is above 0.

Hidden

The slot still calculates, can still alert, can still count toward alignment, and can still influence the blend. Its line is simply not drawn.

Zero weight

The slot still calculates, can still alert, and can still count toward alignment. It only drops out of the blend.

If you remember only one thing from this section, remember this: visibility, participation, and influence are three different switches.

A fast way to inspect the pane without getting lost

When the pane looks busy, review it in this order:

  1. identify the active slots
  2. identify which of those slots are visible
  3. identify which active slots still have non-zero weight
  4. identify which active slots are confirmed and which are live-forming
  5. only then read the blended pair and histogram

That sequence reduces a lot of avoidable storytelling.

A practical verification routine

If you want to verify the pane instead of merely reading it, try this:

  1. Keep only the first three same-symbol slots active.
  2. Set all three weights equal.
  3. Watch the slot colors and the blended fill through a few regime changes.
  4. Set one slot weight to 0 and confirm alignment can still disagree with the blend.
  5. Hide one slot and confirm the visual changes while the logic does not disappear.

By the end of that routine you should know whether the pane is actually becoming clearer or whether it is only becoming smoother.

Visual placeholder: Annotated pane with callouts for one slot line, the blended Fast and Slow pair, the blended histogram, the zero line, the stretch rails, and a side note showing enabled, hidden, and weight = 0 as separate slot states.